Believing the context of the Topfree and Ft. Collins issue limited, I'm attempting to broaden, strengthen the conversation as the topic title states, in the courts. How do we get our rightful freedom out from under the current injustice. How do we free the body. So, I decided to bring up this something, which I have been pondering for a few years, and seek some input and perk some thought.
Eyesup, I read the definition article. It comes across to me as a western concept of religion. Many eastern religions may or may not be concerned with mystical beings. The point of them tends more toward the gaining of enlightenment, or a oneness with the nature of the universe, higher states, etc. The states and the universe are often called as God, a universal order, or deification is given to define aspects. Some Buddhist sects come out of the Hindu world with deities, some without. All Buddhist are spiritual and legally defined as religion. Not just a world view, or identity as defined in the article, but more universe and other concepts of the nature of that universe. Lots of room there, but all religious. I don't think that that article's definition would be broad enough for a court or the whole world.
The court link that you provided didn't work, for some tech reason. American government and religion can be understood simply. Because much of the country was settled because of religious persecution elsewhere, there was a particular tradition culminating in the 1st Amendment to the Constitution, separation of church and state. "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."
We are not required to pray only in buildings. We are not required to act as we have been taught only behind doors. We were given outs on the draft as conscientious objectors for example. We can walk down the street as a poster label for our beliefs. We can tell it as we see it. We can perform rituals in public, pray before a baseball game, or place symbols in our front yards. If turning the other cheek, or helping an old lady across the street to feed her is an act of spiritual, or religious sense, then seeking awareness as a key to divination by exploring the world nude to heighten that awareness is too. If establishing a building as a sacred space and communing with God is religion, then walking in the forest on top of a mountain nude is, too. If a nun or monk will renounce what they have, then it is a choice to renounce the whole kit with the same dignity. All of these fall into the public realm. The government as no place, and is severely restricted from interfering. If all of these are not protected, then all religion is not protected. If some are protected and others are not, then the government has established a state religion. So, if there is sincerity, nude activities, even in public are protected. The only time that religion has been curbed, that I'm aware of, was the polygamy question way back in 1850 something about a political question of becoming a state, and the more recent peyote church. There they managed to convince the supreme court, that there was some danger to people in the practice of religion. Here, we have no danger from unclothed bodies and it is the states job to show just how and who is getting hurt and that it actually needs to protect them. Again, it isn't human sacrifice.
Prosecution consistently states that government can enforce community standards and it has worked. This Ft. Collins case could only assure equality and maybe the freedom of the top half of the body. It doesn't liberate naturists. The incriminate of progress just stops, like the fence at the boundary of a factory farm resort.
Religious freedom has the potential to knock down all existing anti-nudity laws, requiring a redress. The issues of viewing the naked body as not dangerous, but natural, is included and established in a legal argument in the ruling. Then, the law and opinion of the court would state that it has found that viewing the naked body is not harmful. The state would need to find a new reason for these ridiculous unjust laws.
There are no anti nudity laws for example in Kansas, but do you see naked people walking down the street? One guy in dozens of years. Most states are topfree, but topfree is not fashion. It wouldn't change much. It would allow a person to have no fear of prosecution for being seen changing, planting a garden, accidentally being amiss of breaking a silly social more, or communing with nature in a most effective natural way. It would also allow a person to practice their spiritual beliefs, or explore these ideas freely.
Jbee